Amy Semaka1, Thomas G Salopek2. 1. 3158 Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada. 2. Division of Dermatology, Department of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease induced by autoimmune-like dysregulation of the immune system. Treatment options have drastically evolved in recent years, and treatment advances that target specific cytokines and other molecules involved in dysregulation have had a profound effect in controlling the disease. OBJECTIVE: We reviewed the literature to assess the risk of developing melanoma with conventional therapies and newer agents used to treat psoriasis. METHODS: A comprehensive literature search using Medline (via Ovid) and Embase was conducted. RESULTS: The majority of studies reviewed reported insignificant results. Potential risk for melanoma was identified for only 3 out of 15 anti-psoriatic treatments analyzed: adalimumab (relative risk 1.8, 95% CI 1.06-3.00), etanercept (relative risk 2.35, 95% CI 1.46-3.77) and infliximab (Empirical Bayes Geometric Mean 7.90, 95% CI 7.13-8.60). The confidence intervals provided are from prior studies. There are not enough collective data on newer agents to make any conclusions on risk. CONCLUSIONS: We were unable to identify any substantial risk for developing melanoma due to the use of anti-psoriatic treatments. Until additional long-term registry data become available, it would be prudent to continue screening patients with psoriasis at baseline and periodically for melanoma when these agents are used.
BACKGROUND: Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease induced by autoimmune-like dysregulation of the immune system. Treatment options have drastically evolved in recent years, and treatment advances that target specific cytokines and other molecules involved in dysregulation have had a profound effect in controlling the disease. OBJECTIVE: We reviewed the literature to assess the risk of developing melanoma with conventional therapies and newer agents used to treat psoriasis. METHODS: A comprehensive literature search using Medline (via Ovid) and Embase was conducted. RESULTS: The majority of studies reviewed reported insignificant results. Potential risk for melanoma was identified for only 3 out of 15 anti-psoriatic treatments analyzed: adalimumab (relative risk 1.8, 95% CI 1.06-3.00), etanercept (relative risk 2.35, 95% CI 1.46-3.77) and infliximab (Empirical Bayes Geometric Mean 7.90, 95% CI 7.13-8.60). The confidence intervals provided are from prior studies. There are not enough collective data on newer agents to make any conclusions on risk. CONCLUSIONS: We were unable to identify any substantial risk for developing melanoma due to the use of anti-psoriatic treatments. Until additional long-term registry data become available, it would be prudent to continue screening patients with psoriasis at baseline and periodically for melanoma when these agents are used.
Entities:
Keywords:
biologics; immunosuppressives; melanoma; psoriasis; skin cancer
In recent years, there has been a revolution in the treatment of psoriasis such
that we now have a plethora of therapies at our disposal. An improved
understanding of the immune system and its role in the pathogenesis of
psoriasis has led to the development of more targeted therapies with
significant improvements in disease control. For most patients with
psoriasis, we are now able to achieve remission or near remission with
biologics or small molecule agents.Worldwide the incidence of melanoma has been increasing at a faster rate than
almost all other cancers.
The lifetime risk for developing this cancer varies from about 1:39
in the United States to 1:56 in Canada.
Numerous risk factors have been implicated, including excessive
ultraviolet (UV) exposure from the sun or tanning beds, fair skin that
easily burns, a positive family history, having more than 50 moles, and a
history of severe sunburns. A direct relationship between UVB exposure and
melanoma has been demonstrated, with a 10% increase in average annual UVB
irradiation correlating with a 19% increased risk of melanoma.
DNA mutations are at the core of this relationship, and UVA
irradiation may also cause similar effects. Prevention and early detection
of melanoma are the most significant factors in survival, but detection
still gets overlooked as evidenced by low levels of screening in some populations.The prevalence of psoriasis is estimated to be approximately 2% of the total
population worldwide.
In light of the lifetime risk for melanoma, a significant number of
patients with psoriasis will develop this cancer. Excluding phototherapy,
which has been shown to increase the risk of melanoma, there is no definite
association between psoriasis and melanoma.
What is unknown is whether the agents used to treat psoriasis
increase the risk for developing this cancer. To address this issue, we
reviewed the literature for conventional treatments, small molecule drugs
and biologics used in the management of psoriasis to assess whether or not
they increase the possibility of developing melanoma.
Methods
This was a comprehensive literature review. We collaborated with a professional
librarian for assistance with our search. The literature search was
conducted in Medline (via Ovid) and Embase and included 15 treatments that
are approved for psoriasis in North America. The keywords used were the 15
generic drug names and their corresponding brand names (acitretin or
Soriatane®, apremilast or Otezla®, cyclosporine,
methotrexate, adalimumab or Humira®, certolizumab or
Cimzia®, etanercept or Enbrel®, infliximab or
Remicade®, ustekinumab or Stelara®, guselkumab
or Tremfya®, risankizumab or Skyrizi®, brodalumab or
Siliq®, ixekizumab or Taltz®, secukinumab or
Cosentyx®, tildrakizumab or Ilumya®), combined
with psoriasis and melanoma. A breakdown of the articles chosen is provided
(Figure
1).
Figure 1
Breakdown of articles included.
Breakdown of articles included.One author searched for articles and subsequently reviewed them to ascertain
their relevance. Titles and abstracts were screened and the following were
excluded: non-English, irrelevant, duplicates, conference proceedings,
treatments no longer on the market, or if the publication was inaccessible
(ie, could not be obtained through interlibrary loans or was not available
online). All types of studies were examined and any year of publication. If
articles discussed malignancies in general but did not specifically report
on melanoma, they were excluded. Reference lists were reviewed as needed to
retrieve additional articles and ensure available data were adequately
collected.
Results
A total of 550 possible articles were identified in our search. Of those, 35
individual articles specific to the 15 treatments for psoriasis were
selected for inclusion (Supplemental Table S1).
Conventional Treatments
Of the conventional treatments investigated, cyclosporine was not found
to have an increased risk of melanoma.
Methotrexate was found to have a possible increased risk in one
trial (Kaplan Meier estimate for 5-year risk 0.48%, 95% CI 0.43% to 0.53%),
but this was refuted in later studies.
Small Molecule Drugs
Apremilast was the only small molecule drug investigated. A case report
was found that described the recurrence of a patient’s melanoma
coinciding with the clearance of their psoriasis, shortly after they
were started on apremilast.
Other studies did not report any melanoma cases.
TNF-Α Inhibitors
Adalimumab had a significant relative risk (RR) for melanoma in one
retrospective study (1.8, 95% CI 1.06-3.00), as did etanercept (2.35,
95% CI 1.46-3.77).
Infliximab had a significant safety signal, reported as an
empirical Bayes geometric mean (EBGM) of 7.90 (95% CI 7.13-8.60) in
the same study. It is worth noting that this study included multiple
chronic inflammatory conditions and was not limited to patients with
psoriasis. There was one case report of a patient who developed a
melanoma recurrence 4 weeks into psoriasis treatment with etanercept,
and another case of a patient with no apparent risk factors who
developed melanoma after being on etanercept for 5 years.
Three case reports for infliximab were found: one patient
developed nodular amelanotic melanoma 24 months into treatment with
infliximab and methotrexate
; one patient developed nodal melanoma metastasis under
infliximab therapy for 12 months
; another patient developed cerebral melanoma metastasis after
being treated with infliximab for 13 years.
Other studies of various duration demonstrated no increased
risk or did not report melanoma cases with adalimumab,
etanercept
and infliximab.
There was neither a safety signal, nor any reports of melanoma,
in studies of certolizumab.
IL-12/23 Inhibitors
Safety analyses did not report significant risk of melanoma for ustekinumab.
Two psoriasis patients with histories of melanoma had no
recurrence while on ustekinumab.
IL-23 Inhibitors
Short-term trials did not report significant risk of melanoma for guselkumab,
risankizumab,
or tildrakizumab.
IL-17 Inhibitors
There were no data found for either brodalumab or ixekizumab. There were
no significant findings for secukinumab.
One psoriasis patient with a history of melanoma had no
recurrence while on secukinumab.
Discussion
This review of existing literature on systemic agents used to treat psoriasis
brings into light the uncertainty of melanoma risk. Even despite historical
psoriasis treatment with UV light, there does not appear to be a significant
melanoma risk with our currently available treatment options. Logically,
newer agents (IL-12/23 inhibitors, IL-23 and IL-17 inhibitors) have yet to
amass enough use in broad populations for any potential risk of melanoma to
be identified. Numerous reviews comparable to this 1 have been published in
the past, with similar findings and conclusions.
In 2014, a retrospective U.S. database analysis demonstrated that the
proportion of melanoma cases in patients on non-biologic treatment,
adalimumab, infliximab, and etanercept were not significant, nor were the
rates significantly different from those found in the overall psoriasis population.
In 2015, a nationwide registry analysis in Germany found no relevant
differences between any treatments used for psoriasis with respect to
melanoma rates, and the rates were very low.
Another nationwide database analysis in France found no signal for
melanoma with TNF-α inhibitor use across various inflammatory conditions,
although they postulated this could have been due to a lack of power of
their sample.In 2017, a cohort analysis from Northern California found that melanoma rates
in psoriasis patients were not significantly different between
biologically-exposed and unexposed groups,
and another study from Southern California indicated there was no
increased risk for melanoma in psoriasis patients on systemic agents or
biologics as compared to patients on topical treatments.
A large case-control registry analysis across North and South America
and Europe noted that melanoma was one of the 5 most frequently occurring
malignancies in patients on systemic psoriasis treatments but the incidence
rate was 0.06 per 100 patient-years (95% CI 0.04-0.09).
A literature review from 2018 concluded that the data regarding the
risk of melanoma in psoriasis patients treated with TNF-α inhibitors is conflicting.More recently, a systematic review and meta-analysis of patients with
inflammatory diseases being treated with biologics (mostly TNF-α inhibitors)
stated that clinically important increases in melanoma risk cannot be ruled out.
The hazard ratio (HR) for psoriasis was 1.57 (95% CI 0.61-4.09). Only
1 study included in this analysis pertained to psoriasis. Another systematic
review and meta-analysis revealed no increased risk of cancer [overall] in
patients with psoriasis treated with biologic agents.
Interestingly, data from other chronic inflammatory conditions such
as rheumatoid arthritis and inflammatory bowel disease studies are not
entirely conclusive regarding the risk of melanoma with systemic or biologic
treatment, including TNF-α inhibitors.It is worthwhile noting that TNF-α’s pleiotropic roles in the biology and
evolution of cancer have only recently begun to be appreciated, in the last
decade or so.
Numerous articles over the years have incriminated TNF-α inhibitors
as contributing to malignancy, but many articles suggest it has a pro-tumor
effect in melanoma.
It has been remarked that perhaps instead of trying to increase TNF
tumor levels, blocking TNF-α may unveil a viable strategy to boost immune
checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) response in patients with metastatic melanoma.
In a mouse melanoma model, using an ICI alone allowed for the
regression of 20% of tumors, but combining it with a TNF-α inhibitor induced
the regression of 75% of tumors.The major limitation with this review is our lack of scrutiny regarding the
types of patients included in our selected articles. Because this was a
literature review, critical appraisal of included studies was out of scope.
We recognize that not all studies address confounding factors that would
increase the risk of melanoma, such as tanning bed use or a personal or
family history. A trial population with a high prevalence of melanoma could
conceal any possible association of drug and melanoma risk and trial
duration can influence the prospect of risk, with longer trials potentially
enabling the emergence of melanoma over a greater period of time. As
previously mentioned, some treatments are still in their infancy on the
market (ie, brodalumab, guselkumab, ixekizumab, risankizumab,
tildrakizumab), and there has not been enough time to adequately capture a
risk. Furthermore, combining data from multiple chronic inflammatory
conditions can blur the interpretation of risk, specifically when a
breakdown for each inflammatory condition investigated is not provided as is
the case with one article we included.The primary strength of our literature review is the comprehensive examination
of 15 individual psoriasis treatments spanning both older and new and from a
multitude of study types that were reported across the world. We provide a
pertinent summary of existing literature that encompasses a breadth of
results. Our findings may allow clinicians to provide their psoriasis
patients with favorable drug treatments that improve their disease control
and better yet, their quality of life, while not diminishing the obvious
need to continue monitoring patients for melanoma. Fortunately, psoriasis
patients likely have heightened screening with routine dermatology visits.
As their psoriasis clears, it may uncover melanoma and clinicians should
bear in mind this optimal time to perform a thorough skin exam. Patient
education and teaching self-exams should not be underestimated as well.
Increased awareness is indispensable for both clinicians and patients,
especially as drug development continues to evolve and longer-term
epidemiological data accumulate.
Conclusion
The current evidence for melanoma risk in psoriasis patients being treated with
systemic agents is unsubstantiated. The development and progression of
melanoma is highly complex and likely depends on the interaction between a
number of different factors. Additional studies investigating the recurrence
of melanoma in patients with a current or past diagnosis and using systemic
or biologic agents would be valuable to better understand any possible
relationship between the two. Additionally, studies that expose the
mechanism of action of various treatments and their implications for
melanoma development and progression would add to our understanding of these
relationships. The overall findings from this literature review are
inconsistent but a risk apart from drug therapy can never entirely be
excluded, and with that, one thing is for certain: we should continue
screening our patients for the presence of melanoma, to foster early
detection when the chances of survival are at their highest.Click here for additional data file.Supplemental material, Online supplementary file 1, for Risk of
Developing Melanoma With Systemic Agents Used to Treat Psoriasis: A
Review of the Literature by Amy Semaka and Thomas G. Salopek in
Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery
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